In mathematics, a quasisymmetrichomeomorphism between metric spaces is a map that generalizes bi-Lipschitz maps. While bi-Lipschitz maps shrink or expand the diameter of a set by no more than a multiplicative factor, quasisymmetric maps satisfy the weaker geometric property that they preserve the relative sizes of sets: if two sets A and B have diameters t and are no more than distance t apart, then the ratio of their sizes changes by no more than a multiplicative constant. These maps are also related to quasiconformal maps, since in many circumstances they are in fact equivalent.
A map f:X→Y is said to be H-weakly-quasisymmetric for some H > 0 if for all triples of distinct points x,y,z in X, we have Not all weakly quasisymmetric maps are quasisymmetric. However, if X is connected and X and Y are doubling, then all weakly quasisymmetric maps are quasisymmetric. The appeal of this result is that proving weak-quasisymmetry is much easier than proving quasisymmetry directly, and in many natural settings the two notions are equivalent.
δ-monotone maps
A monotone mapf:H → H on a Hilbert spaceH is δ-monotone if for all x and y in H, To grasp what this condition means geometrically, suppose f = 0 and consider the above estimate when y = 0. Then it implies that the angle between the vector x and its image f stays between 0 and arccos δ < π/2. These maps are quasisymmetric, although they are a much narrower subclass of quasisymmetric maps. For example, while a general quasisymmetric map in the complex plane could map the real line to a set of Hausdorff dimension strictly greater than one, a δ-monotone will always map the realline to a rotated graph of a Lipschitz functionL:ℝ → ℝ.
Doubling measures
The real line
Quasisymmetric homeomorphisms of the real line to itself can be characterized in terms of their derivatives. An increasing homeomorphism f:ℝ → ℝ is quasisymmetric if and only if there is a constant C > 0 and a doubling measureμ on the real line such that
An analogous result holds in Euclidean space. Suppose C = 0 and we rewrite the above equation for f as Writing it this way, we can attempt to define a map using this same integral, but instead integrate over ℝn: if μ is a doubling measure on ℝn and then the map is quasisymmetric.
Quasisymmetry and quasiconformality in Euclidean space
Let Ω and Ω´ be open subsets of ℝn. If f : Ω → Ω´ is η-quasisymmetric, then it is also K-quasiconformal, where K > 0 is a constant depending on η. Conversely, if f : Ω → Ω´ is K-quasiconformal and B is contained in Ω, then f is η-quasisymmetric on B, where η depends only on K.